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2013 Annual Survey: Recent Developments in Sports Law 485 (2013)

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                             SURVEY

          2013   ANNUAL SURVEY: RECENT
        DEVELOPMENTS IN SPORTS LAW

                            INTRODUCTION

    This survey provides a snapshot of important sports industry cases decided
between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2013. Not every sports-related case
decided in 2013  is included in this survey. Instead, this survey briefly
summaries a wide range of cases that impacted the sports industry in 2013. The
survey intends to provide the reader with greater insight into the many current
sports-related legal issues and to highlight the most recent developments in
sports law. To better assist the reader, this survey is arranged alphabetically by
the specific substantive area of law associated with each sports law case.

                         ADMINISTRATIVE  LAW

    Administrative law covers the actions of the federal, state, and local
governments, such as adjudicating, rulemaking, and regulatory enforcement.
One interesting case involving the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
is included below.

                 Comcast Cable Commc'ns, LLC  v. FCCI

    Comcast Cable offers cable television to subscribers in several different
packages known  as tiers. Comcast carries two of its own sports networks,
Versus and the Golf Channel, on its most broadly distributed tiers, and carries
another sports network, the Tennis Channel, on a less broadly distributed tier.
In 2009, the TennisChannel successfully filed a complaint with the Federal
Communications   Commission  (FCC)  alleging that Comcast  violated the
Communications  Act of 1964 by refusing to broadcastthe Tennis Channel as
widely as its own sports networks. Comcast filed a petition with the United
States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia seeking to review the
FCC's  order providing the Tennis Channel with the same coverage as Versus
and the Golf Channel. The court granted Comcast's petition because the FCC
did not provide evidence that Comcast would receive any benefit from placing


   1. 717 F.3d 982 (D.C. Cir. 2013).

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